Breaking……..
June 27, 2026 11:15 AM EDT
📷
Michigan Congresswoman caught receiving Massive Campaign Money Laundering!
Seven Donors Contribute Over $12,000,000 to FEC recipients!
At 11:15 AM EDT probable malfeasance involving Michigan Congresswoman Haly Stevens was reported to the FBI Tip Line!
Michigan Congresswoman, Haley Stevens, running for U. S. Senate caught receiving Massive Money Laundering since 2017!
A comprehensive 118-page report requested by Investigative Reporter, Bob Cushman, performed by Perplexity A.I. reveals serious problems!
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
This report presents a complete forensic analysis of all itemized individual contributions to the Haley Stevens for Congress campaign committee (C00638650) covering 2017 through 2026, using the official FEC Schedule A export file "Haley-Stevens-since-2010.xlsx." The full dataset of 77,152 records representing $82,579,464.62 raised from 10,800 unique donors has been subjected to three families of fraud-detection algorithms: the Bob Cushman Structuring Detection Suite (C1–C5), the Peter Bernegger Pattern Analysis Suite (B1–B6), and Standard Smurfing Detection (S1–S3).
The analysis produced 165,870 total algorithm flags across 14 detection categories, identifying 10,799 unique donors with measurable risk profiles. Of these, 6,880 donors are classified as CRITICAL risk and 1,314 as HIGH risk — together representing 75.9% of the donor pool. When PAC and conduit committee transactions are set aside, 50 individual donors emerge as the highest-priority suspected smurf actors.
Most critical findings include: (1) 18 of the top 50 individual donors exceeded the applicable per-election contribution limit in at least one election year, with AL KAMEN exceeding limits in four separate years (2019, 2021, 2023, 2025); (2) BRYAN WATSON exceeded limits in two years and accumulated $21,400 total — nearly 8x the per-election limit; (3) ERIC HIRSCHHORN and MICHAEL BAUER each exceeded limits in three separate election years; (4) ActBlue transmitted $10.9 million in bundled small-dollar contributions — a conduit vehicle that has been the subject of ongoing federal investigations into straw-donor activity; (5) the American Israel Public Affairs Committee Political Action Committee contributed $1,137,670 — a sum that merits scrutiny under coordination rules.
An extremely concerning “Smurf” Analysis is as follows:
📷
SUMMARY OF FINDINGS
Finding 1: Serial Over-Limit Individual Donors
At least 18 of the top 50 individual donors exceeded the applicable per-election contribution limit in at least one election year based on single-year aggregate totals. AL KAMEN ($38,300 total, violated limits in 2019, 2021, 2023, and 2025) and ERIC HIRSCHHORN ($20,117 total, violated in 2018, 2020, 2022, and 2025) are repeat offenders spanning multiple election cycles. BRYAN WATSON accumulated $21,400 total — nearly 8x the $2,700 single-election limit. Each over-limit year independently constitutes a potential violation of 52 U.S.C. § 30116.
Finding 2: ActBlue as a High-Volume Conduit
ActBlue transmitted $10,919,631.79 to the Stevens campaign — 13.2% of total funds raised — across thousands of transactions. ActBlue has been the subject of ongoing FEC complaints and a 2024 Republican lawsuit alleging that it processed millions of contributions from fictitious or unverified donors, including elderly individuals who deny making contributions. The Stevens campaign's heavy reliance on ActBlue warrants scrutiny of the underlying donor lists.⁵
Finding 3: Coordinated Maximum-Amount Giving Campaigns
Bernegger B3 identified 40,730+ instances of multiple donors giving identical amounts on the same date. Particularly notable are clusters of 10–20+ donors giving exactly $2,700, $2,900, or $3,300 on the same day — consistent with a bundler or digital platform instructing donors to give the maximum amount simultaneously. This pattern is most concentrated in the 2018, 2020, and 2022 election cycles.
Finding 4: AIPAC PAC Concentration
The American Israel Public Affairs Committee Political Action Committee contributed $1,137,670 — the second-largest organizational donor after ActBlue. The Stevens campaign faced a 2022 primary challenge mounted with AIPAC support. Under FEC coordination rules (11 C.F.R. § 109.20), any coordination between the campaign and AIPAC on expenditure strategy would be prohibited. The unusually high concentration of AIPAC funds merits review of coordination disclosures.
Finding 5: Extensive Name-Variant Clustering
C5 Name Variant analysis produced 2,281 flags across the 77,152 records — indicating substantial instances of donors appearing under multiple name formats at the same ZIP code. This is a common method for exceeding individual contribution limits while evading automated FEC deduplication systems.
Finding 6: End-of-Quarter Deadline Bundling
B2 Deadline Timing analysis produced 13,810 flags — donations made within 7 days of FEC quarterly reporting deadlines. This concentration is consistent with systematic bundler-organized giving designed to maximize reportable totals at each filing deadline. The pattern is especially pronounced at Q2 (June 30) and Q4 (December 31) deadlines in election years.
The complete 118 page report can be seen at (https://t.co/OAxH0HssEK)
Bob Cushman – Investigative Reporter
The Freedom Press (https://t.co/X28MYpbAJb)
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Join the fight against the Data Centers! The Michigan Republican Party Chairman @SenJRunestad is linking arms with GOP grassroots. Grab friends and family and head to Lansing THIS TUESDAY at 5:30 pm.
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One of the Republican Senate Candidate for District 25 (Sanilac, Tuscola, Huron, St. Clair, and Macomb counties).
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Help us stop Michigan from adding its name to the list of states calling for this risky convention. Contact your state legislators. Share the facts. Stand with the Constitution.
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What does Trump defunding LA's homeless NGOs have to do with Democrat panic over USPS's new proposed ballot-barcode rules? Everything. https://t.co/pp4BvolISk
Jocelyn Benson — Organized Summary of Malfeasance
Preface: This document has been analyzed by the AI known as “Claude” using the document titled “Michigan’s Corruption Explained – Follow the Money” Version compiled on June 11, 2026 by Investigative Reporter – Bob Cushman. This master document results from seven years of research on various forms of corruption and malfeasance and is exemplified in 129 Chapters and 1011 pages. The individual chapters and the complete version of all chapters can be downloaded for study and/or verification by clicking on (https://t.co/X28MYpbAJb) This complete work is referred by the author as “the Michigan Corruption Dossier”.
Compiled from "Michigan's Corruption Explained – Follow The Money" by Bob Cushman (ver. 051426)
Scope note: This document organizes the allegations and findings as presented by the author. Where the source document itself records a court outcome, that outcome is noted — including rulings that went in Benson's favor. Footnote links are reproduced from the document; a few were line-wrapped or garbled in the PDF and have been repaired where the original is recoverable (flagged where uncertain).
I. Alleged Unlawful Rulemaking — "Creating Election Law Without Legislative Authority"
1. The 2022 Election Challenger Manual (Chapters 40, 47, 52–55). The document's most heavily developed allegation. The author contends that Benson's May 2022 manual, "The Appointment, Rights, and Duties of Election Challengers and Poll Watchers," imposed restrictions on poll challengers that have no basis in statute and directly contradict challenger rights enumerated in MCL 168.733 — including bans on speaking with election inspectors other than a "challenger liaison," distance restrictions near poll books, prohibitions on phones and recording devices at absent voter counting boards, warning/ejection procedures recorded in poll books, and sequestration of ejected challengers until 8 p.m. The author argues this violates Article IV § 1 of the Michigan Constitution, which vests lawmaking power solely in the Legislature, and incorporates Patrick Colbeck's formal request for remedy itemizing manual provisions against MCL 168.727, 168.733, and 168.742.
Litigation trail as recorded in the document: Five plaintiffs (counsel Ann Howard) and a parallel RNC/MRP suit were consolidated before Court of Claims Judge Swartzle, who ruled against Benson on October 20, 2022, finding the manual conflicted with statute.[^1][^2] Benson appealed rather than revise the manual; on November 3, 2022, the Michigan Supreme Court granted Benson's request for a stay, 5-2, allowing the manual to govern the November 2022 election.[^3][^4] Justice Zahra dissented, writing that the Secretary "cannot have it both ways" by calling binding requirements mere "instructions" exempt from the Administrative Procedures Act, and Justice Viviano's dissent stated the election would "not be governed by Michigan law as interpreted by the only court to rule on the merits."[^5] The document reproduces a Gateway Pundit analysis by Patty McMurray of these decisions.[^6] The author also alleges Benson filed a motion to appeal the order compelling her to conform the manual to statute, characterized as a refusal to follow the law.[^7]
2. The 2020 absentee-signature guidance (Chapters 50, 66). The author alleges Benson's October 2020 guidance instructed clerks to presume absentee ballot signatures were valid, contrary to statutory signature-verification requirements. The document records that Court of Claims Judge Christopher Murray ruled the guidance invalid in March 2021 as an improperly promulgated "rule" under the APA.[^8]
3. The Election Officials' Manual, Chapter 8 — mismatched ballot numbers (Chapters 51, 52). The author alleges that Chapter 8 of Benson's official Election Officials' Manual (updated October 2020), posted on the SOS website,[^9][^10] instructs workers to process absentee ballots whose stub numbers do not match the poll book as "challenged" ballots — which are then counted — whereas MCL 168.797a(2) requires such ballots to be rejected. Because the manual is statewide guidance, the author concludes the entire state processed absentee ballots illegally in 2020, 2021, and 2022, and identifies this as "one of the primary pathways" of alleged absentee ballot fraud. This overlaps with the Karamo v. Winfrey emergency suit (Case 22-012759-AW, filed October 26, 2022, before Judge Timothy Kenny), which alleged Detroit's AVCB taped over and relabeled mismatched ballot numbers and counted the ballots.
II. Alleged Election-Administration Failures and Fraud Enablement
4. The 6-foot rule at the TCF Center (Chapter 50). Benson allegedly imposed an unauthorized rule in 2020 forcing challengers to stand at least six feet from election workers; challengers attempting to perform statutory duties were expelled from the TCF Center. The document notes the rule was overturned/settled in litigation.[^11]
5. Refusal to remove ~26,000 deceased registrants from voter rolls (Chapters 50, 66). The author alleges Benson knowingly kept roughly 25,000–26,000 dead voters on the Qualified Voter File. The document records that Judge Jane M. Beckering rejected Benson's motion to dismiss the lawsuit over the rolls.[^12][^13]
6. Failure to supervise Detroit elections (Chapters 50, 51). In August 2020 the chair and vice chair of the Wayne County Board of Canvassers formally resolved to request that Benson appoint a monitor over Detroit's absentee voter counting boards and investigate Detroit's training and processes.[^14] The author alleges Benson failed to provide that oversight in 2020, 2021, and 2022, and "looked the other way" while Detroit Clerk Janice Winfrey's worker manual instructed illegal processing of mismatched absentee ballots (see Item 3).
7. Uncertified election equipment (Chapter 50). The author asserts that Michigan's election equipment used under Benson's administration was not certified.[^15]
8. Outsourcing voter-file maintenance (Chapter 66). Citing Thomas More Society Special Counsel Erick Kaardal, the author alleges Benson abdicated her federally designated duty by illegally outsourcing voter file maintenance, in claimed violation of the Help America Vote Act.
9. "Fomenting violence" through false narratives (Chapter 50). The author alleges Benson publicly promoted a false narrative of right-wing election threats — citing a Face the Nation appearance — characterized in the document as setting the stage for a "false flag" ahead of November 8, 2022.[^16]
III. Alleged Financial Misconduct and Conflicts of Interest
10. MCELA and the $12 million in "Zuckerbucks" (Chapters 50, 66). Benson founded the Michigan Center for Election Law and Administration (originally the Richard Austin Center) in 2008 and led it until turning it over to associates — including Sally Marsh, her own SOS director of special projects and former campaign deputy. The document alleges that in 2020 this nominally nonpartisan 501(c)(3), which had never reported over $50,000 in revenue, received $12,040,000from the Zuckerberg/Chan-funded Center for Election Innovation and Research and spent $11,889,365 of it within months — $9,799,407 to Waterfront Strategies (a subsidiary of GMMB, the largest Democratic consulting firm) and $2,088,000 to Alper Strategies (founded by Democratic strategist Jill Alper). The author characterizes this as an illegal partisan use of a nonpartisan charity tied directly to the sitting Secretary of State.[^17][^18][^19][^20]
11. Non-enforcement of campaign contribution limits (Chapters 41, 42). As the state's chief campaign-finance officer, Benson allegedly took no action against more than $6.4 million in donations to Gov. Whitmer exceeding the $7,150 individual limit (including $250,000 each from Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker and attorney Mark Bernstein). The document reproduces the author's formal letter to Benson identifying 155 over-limit donations totaling roughly $4,745,000 and requesting their return; no remedial action is recorded.
12. Alleged "smurf" money laundering into Benson's 2026 gubernatorial campaign (Chapters 94, 117). The document's capstone Benson allegation. Analyzing the Michigan Campaign Finance database,[^21] the author reports that of $5,581,032donated to Benson's committees since November 8, 2022, $2,532,256 (45%) came from out of state, across 42,092 donations (49.6% out-of-state) — which the author argues is explicable only as laundering through "smurfs" (identities, disproportionately seniors aged 64–85, allegedly used without their knowledge to break large sums into thousands of micro-donations). Named examples with full data files: Robert Ahronheim (Ann Arbor, 448 FEC donations, ~$29,614),[^22] Linda Appling (Lansing, ~8,700 donations, ~$74,000),[^23] Terry Harris (Howard City, 1,416 donations averaging $2),[^24] Mary Hannon (Jackson),[^25] Marcella Menconi (Surprise, AZ — $1 donations precisely on the 28th of each month),[^26] Ted Gurtner (Ocean Pines, MD),[^27] Sokhan Hing (Clinton, MD — 2,925 donations averaging $1.75),[^28] Frank Rowsome (Severna Park, MD — $87,171 over 3,390 donations),[^29] Frederick Wanzenberg (White Plains/Larchmont, NY — $179,262 over 8,868 donations),[^30] and Michael Bailey (Casselberry, FL — repeated $1 donations). The alleged mechanism runs through ActBlue, which the author connects to the April 24, 2025 White House memorandum ordering a Treasury/DOJ investigation into straw-donor and foreign contributions, citing 22 "significant fraud campaigns" detected on the platform and 237 foreign-IP prepaid-card donations in a 30-day 2024 window.[^31] The author further disputes Benson's "94% grassroots, no corporate PAC money" campaign claim as cover for this structure, and the supporting full-donation dataset is published by the author.[^32][^33]
IV. Pattern Characterization (Author's Synthesis)
Across Chapters 40–55, 66, 94, and 117, the author's through-line is that Benson repeatedly (a) legislated by manual in violation of the APA and Michigan Constitution — losing at the Court of Claims at least three times (Murray 2021, Swartzle 2022, and the October 2022 challenger-form ruling) before being rescued by a Supreme Court stay; (b) selectively declined to enforce election and campaign-finance law against allied officials (Whitmer, Winfrey); (c) maintained undisclosed partisan financial machinery (MCELA/Zuckerbucks); and (d) is herself the beneficiary of an industrial-scale ActBlue smurfing operation funding her 2026 gubernatorial run. The document quotes a Karamo campaign claim that "this is the fifth time a judge has slapped her down."
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Footnotes
[^1]: Detroit News — Judge knocks down some of Benson's new election rules: https://t.co/qNbTgjxcOP[^2]: U.S. News — Judge: Michigan election challenger manual can't be used: https://t.co/fYSCHnE9Sf (URL repaired from garbled PDF text) [^3]: Judge Swartzle decision (author's archive copy): https://t.co/ZeWoydDUZR (Drive ID may be truncated in the PDF text layer) [^4]: Michigan Supreme Court decision (author's archive copy): https://t.co/N0w95MJAjL[^5]: Zahra and Viviano dissents, quoted within the Supreme Court decision file at note 4. [^6]: Gateway Pundit / Patty McMurray analysis, Nov. 3, 2022: https://t.co/iV5X0mbNIp[^7]: 100 Percent Fed Up — Benson appeals ruling on her training manual: https://t.co/hpiP7KQBXT[^8]: Detroit News — Judge rules Benson's ballot signature verification guidance invalid: https://t.co/HYrklgj57E[^9]: Michigan SOS Election Administration page: https://t.co/ChHCbAtcPW[^10]: Election Officials' Manual, Ch. 8 — Absent Voter Counting Boards (PDF): https://t.co/BNOfCfmYeG[^11]: Michigan Advance — State settles lawsuit, allows poll challengers within 6 feet of workers: https://t.co/bbLPpgnkwQ[^12]: Heritage Foundation — Lawsuit continues against Benson over dead voter rolls: https://t.co/7phDSusDEA[^13]: Michigan News Source / Katie Heid, Sept. 19, 2022: https://t.co/399OlJ89z9[^14]: Detroit News — Benson asked to investigate Detroit's "perfect storm" of voting problems: https://t.co/K0RFBdYscz[^15]: Rumble — "Election Crime in Michigan": https://t.co/EZd1rZgEMC[^16]: Detroit Free Press — Benson on Face the Nation: https://t.co/sVb4ARxWas (URL repaired from garbled PDF text) [^17]: InfluenceWatch — The Michigan Center for Election Law and Administration: https://t.co/61DP0BIMyp[^18]: Michigan Star / Chris Butler — Zuckerberg-funded CEIR donated nearly $12 million: https://t.co/OifRqLTZeS[^19]: Star News Network / Frank Miele — Zuckerberg-funded nonprofit paid $11.8 million to Democratic consulting firms: https://t.co/sLqco0DVFH[^20]: Michigan Capitol Confidential — Democratic activists took Zuckerberg money for "nonpartisan" GOTV work: https://t.co/57MFc3W2SM[^21]: Michigan Campaign Finance Searchable Database: https://t.co/fbnimRBP8K[^22]: Ahronheim FEC data (author's file): https://t.co/sApwnzyisM (Drive ID may be truncated) [^23]: Appling FEC data (author's file): https://t.co/PYtPHaDUpG (Drive ID may be truncated) [^24]: Harris FEC data (author's file): https://t.co/a3P2aeXkc3 (Drive ID may be truncated) [^25]: Hannon FEC data (author's file): https://t.co/eOaqQF6VEw[^26]: Menconi FEC data (author's file): https://t.co/2ScLKJtZvm[^27]: Gurtner FEC data (author's file): https://t.co/wgmeVQ7KNl[^28]: Hing FEC data (author's file): https://t.co/FQkpG2DNCx[^29]: Rowsome FEC data (author's file): https://t.co/JiAhY5bDF7 (Drive ID may be truncated) [^30]: Wanzenberg FEC data (author's file): https://t.co/OCWamkV7UA[^31]: White House memorandum, April 24, 2025 — Investigation into Unlawful "Straw Donor" and Foreign Contributions: https://t.co/1sj90RcbZ0[^32]: Full Benson donation dataset since Nov. 2022 (author's file): https://t.co/f371HjmyhU (Drive ID may be truncated) [^33]: Money-laundering methodology article (author's file): https://t.co/S4T84Cio3d
Corporate media hid seven reasons Democrats are losing 2026. Today's C&C counts them — plus same-day WaPo and NYT misinformation crimes.
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“The ultimate plan is to connect all CBDCs and digital assets on a shared ledger that can be tracked, programmed, and censored, and for an ultimate convergence to a single global digital currency backed by energy credits.”
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What’s happening in Michigan?
23,000+ cameras in view… and counting.
Michigan residents were told this was about “safety.”
Now entire roadways, neighborhoods and travel patterns are being mapped in real time.
Thousands of cameras.
Constant surveillance.
Zero public discussion.
How many people even knew this network was already this massive across Michigan?
Drive safely & wisely in your Memorial Holiday travels. 🇺🇸
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